American Cinematheque offering Nicolas Roeg tribute in January

Next January, the American Cinematheque and BAFTA Los Angeles will present Nicolas Roeg Remembered, a seven-film retrospective of the British director, who died this November. Noted for his adult depictions of sexuality (explicit but not exploitative), Roeg was more an art-house icon than a genre filmmaker, but many of his films dabbled in horror, fantasy, and science fiction themes. Don't Look Now is a highbrow horror film starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie that builds to a devastating finale. Cold Heaven is a bizarre religious thriller in which Catholicism is presented as another of the many alternate realities visible in Roeg's oeuvre. The Man Who Fell to Earth, starring David Bowie as an alien, is perhaps the director's best-known work, but The Witches, produced by Jim Henson's company, is Roeg's most accessible film - a wicked, funny, scary adaptation of Roald Dahl's children's book, intended for family audiences. Even Roeg's non-genre titles suggest a certain psychedelic mysticism: his stock-in-trade was using montage to suggest connections between events separated by time and space, hinting at some sort of subliminal awareness beyond our usual perceptions.

Nicolas Roeg Remembered will run from Thursday, January 17 through Sunday, January 20, at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood. The complete schedule of screenings includes:

Walkabout/The Man Who Fell to Earth with cinematographer Tony Richmond in person- January 17

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Steve Biodrowski, Administrator

A graduate of USC film school, Steve Biodrowski has worked as a film critic, journalist, and editor at Movieline, Premiere, Le Cinephage, The Dark Side., Cinefantastique magazine, Fandom.com, and Cinescape Online. He is currently Managing Editor of Cinefantastique Online and owner-operator of Hollywood Gothique.